Author

admin

Browsing

One Senate Republican proved that it’s still possible to bridge the chasm between the aisles after brokering an end to the longest government shutdown in history.

The 43-day impasse in Congress may have ended in the House, but it was in the Senate that Sen. Katie Britt, R-Ala., worked to build an old-fashioned bipartisan coalition to jump-start the stalled chamber.

It took several weeks, numerous conversations and reconstructing broken trust between Senate Republicans and Democrats to pull off what would become a bipartisan package to reopen the government.

And it was something that Britt, in an interview with Fox News Digital, contended she was uniquely positioned to do.

She was chief of staff for former Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., and knew how the sausage was made in the upper chamber. She also had longstanding relationships with some of the key Democratic negotiators, like Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., who ultimately joined most Republicans to reopen the government.

For Britt, who chairs the Homeland Security Appropriations Committee, the key to reopening the government was funding the government through spending bills.

‘I’m very grateful for those on the other side of the aisle that had the courage to step forward and say, you know, we’re not going to allow everyday Americans to suffer as a result of keeping this government closed,’ she said. ‘I do think what we saw was a lot of people that were listening to their political consultants instead of the actual constituency that they serve.’

‘Because clearly, I think a lot of people had lost sight of the fact that we were in this place because we hadn’t passed appropriations bills,’ Britt continued.

During the last session of Congress, the chambers were split. Republicans held a tenuous grip on the House while Schumer and Senate Democrats controlled the Senate. Many of the spending bills produced by the House were often partisan, while the bipartisan bills crafted in the Senate never made it to the floor.

‘If you look back over Senator Schumer’s tenure as leader and over the last two years, he didn’t even put one bill on the floor last year, which is what led us to this posture of a CR to start with,’ she said.

Britt believed that at least moving a trio of spending bills could perhaps unstick the gears in the Senate and get lawmakers closer to ending the shutdown. Whether that package of bills could end up attached to legislation to reopen the government, however, remained elusive.

While she lauded both Senate Appropriations Chair Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., for their roles in ensuring the funding process actually worked, her role as de facto arbiter began roughly three weeks before the shutdown ended.

One of the main issues before and throughout the shutdown was a lack of trust that Senate Democrats had in Republicans, an issue that was reaffirmed when the GOP voted to claw back billions in congressionally approved funding earlier in the year.

That trust issue was further solidified due to a lack of commitments from Republicans to prevent the Trump administration from continuing to carve away at federal funding with impoundments and rescissions.

And the key moment that saw the wheels begin to move in the direction of reopening came when Senate Democrats blocked the Defense appropriations bill, which would have paid service members among a plethora of other things.

‘The question that I had for each of them, you know, why? This came out of committee in a bipartisan way, and it was clear, they wanted greater conversation around how we were planning on moving these things forward,’ she said.

It was from those informal talks that she leaned into speaking with more Democratic lawmakers to try and assuage their concerns about what would happen during and after the spending bills were passed. Those conversations brought her all the way to Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., on whether he would approve of the appropriations process moving forward.

‘Taking a cue from that is why I really leaned into conversations, both with people that I believed were gettable in finding a pathway forward on reopening the government and those who were not,’ she said. ‘You know, just saying, like, ‘Look, guys, here’s what we’re going to do. We’re going to work to fund these three bills. And if we do that, you know, here will be the ultimate result of it.’’

But, as with any successful legislation, there’s always a numbers game.

Not every Senate Republican was in favor of reopening the government, or at least the vehicle to do so, a point Britt reiterated often. Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., had consistently voted against the House-passed bill until that point.

So that meant she needed to find the numbers elsewhere across the aisle. Shaheen, who was leading negotiations for Senate Democrats, largely had her numbers in check, but there was one more that needed an extra nudge: Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va.

Over the course of 48 hours, the weekend of the penultimate vote to seal the deal in the Senate, Kaine went from being against the package to supporting it. Britt acted as a liaison to the White House, bringing Kaine’s demands that the administration roll back firings carried out during the shutdown and provide protections to federal workers, which the administration ultimately agreed to.

But ending the shutdown was the first hurdle. Lawmakers now have until Jan. 30, 2026, to fund the government. Britt said she would keep doing what she’s been doing: talking to the other side.

‘I am hopeful that people will remember what we’re supposed to be doing, and that is working to pass these bills,’ she said. ‘And I am sure that there will be challenges in front of us, but you know, having dialogue and working to break the logjam will be essential when it does occur to keep America moving.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The Memphis Grizzlies star has clashed with new coach Tuomas Iisalo and his staff, and Morant’s play suffered before another injury sidelined him in recent games. He’s on pace to set career lows in field goal percentage and 3-point percentage heading into a home game against the Denver Nuggets on Monday, Nov. 24.

Morant has appeared in just 71 games since the start of the 2023-24 NBA season due to various ailments and off-court issues, but he’s still a hot topic around the league. He has been the subject of constant trade rumors this season in light of the apparent turmoil within the organization, which also fired former coach Taylor Jenkins with just nine games remaining in the 2024-25 regular season. Morant also made headlines on Saturday night against the Dallas Mavericks for a testy, trash-talking exchange with Mavericks guard Klay Thompson while Morant was on the bench injured.

Monday’s matchup with Nikola Jokic and the Nuggets is the Grizzlies’ first game since that dust-up. Here’s the latest on Morant’s injury status for the Grizzlies’ game against the Nuggets on Nov. 24:

Is Ja Morant playing today?

No, Morant is listed as out on the Grizzlies’ injury report for their game against the Denver Nuggets on Monday, Nov. 24. It will be the fourth missed game in a row due to a calf strain.

Ja Morant injury update

The Grizzlies announced Morant suffered a right calf strain during its Nov. 15 game against the Cleveland Cavaliers and would be re-evaluated in two weeks.

Ja Morant stats

Morant is averaging 17.9 points, 7.6 assists and 3.5 rebounds in 12 games this season.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Ron Roher had already spent nearly two decades as a junior high math teacher and coach in Lexington, Illinois, when he first met Lance Benedict. At the time, Roher was coaching his son Scott’s Little League team, and Lance, just a year younger, was on the roster.

Even then, Lance stood out. He had a big left-handed swing and serious speed. But it wasn’t until years later that Roher felt compelled to step more deeply into Lance’s life.

By junior high, Lance was a restless kid, always moving, always up for something. In a small town like Lexington, which has hovered around 2,000 residents for decades and could be mistaken for thousands of others like it across the country, there was always something to do.

“Want to head down to the Mackinaw River and go swimming, Lance?”

“Sure thing, guys.”

“Want to ride bikes down to The Filling Station?”

“I’m in.”

And then, as he got a little older, came the offers that could derail a future.

“Want to grab some beer, Lance?”

“Want to smoke a little weed?”

You get the picture.

“I was kind of friends with everyone,” Lance said. “I guess, growing up next to the trailer court, I ran around with the rough kids. I didn’t even know they were rough at the time.”

Roher knew Lance’s dad was only around sporadically, and that his mom was doing her best to keep up, running a small flower business and raising a family. Now Lance was in eighth grade, and Roher was his coach in baseball, basketball and track. He saw Lance slipping, and he felt responsible. So, he did what he always did. He acted.

One day during lunch hour, Roher pulled Lance into the school library and sat him down in the computer lab.

Roher rarely raised his voice for anything, and he didn’t today. Still, he was stern.

Roher started by telling Lance he believed in him. It wasn’t something the boy was used to hearing from an adult. It embarrassed him at first.

“I still remember dropping my head and staring at those cowboy boots he always wore,” Lance said. “Just staring at them.”

Then Roher asked him to look him in the eye. He told him he was making choices that would lead to trouble. He reminded him of his athletic gifts, his potential and the future he could have if he wanted it.

Roher ended by saying if Lance ever needed anything – anything at all – he was here for him.

“When someone goes out of their way to tell you that,” Lance said. “He didn’t have to do that. He cared enough to do that. And I respected him enough to listen because I knew he was right.”

At first, Lance slowly started leaving the bad influences behind. He excelled in high school on and off the field, earning homecoming king honors his senior year. He played four years of college baseball. Then, he became a firefighter in nearby Bloomington.

Next year, he’ll retire as captain.

“I probably would’ve made some horrible decisions,” Lance said. “I always tell Scott, your dad changed the direction of my life with that one conversation.”

Seasons that begin in August and end in June

Today, if you find yourself driving down Old Route 66 and turning onto Main Street in Lexington, you might end up at Kemp’s Upper Tap – a modern gathering spot with a rotating craft beer list and a menu that reflects the times. Strike up a conversation with the owner, Jon Kemp, and you’ll learn he studied math and played basketball under Roher back in 1996.

Looking for something quieter? Head to the Lexington Public Library, where Sherrie Dodson-Patton oversees the shelves and recommends novels. Long before she took on that role, she was a math student of Roher’s in 1967.

Need to talk water issues? Stop by the Public Works Office and ask for Billy DuBois, the Water Superintendent. He learned math, played baseball and ran track for Roher in 1987. And if your concern goes beyond water, City Hall is just down the street – where Mayor Spencer Johanson, a 1972 Roher student and basketball player, might be in his office.

In Lexington, it’s hard to walk into any building without meeting someone who was taught or coached by Roher. The high school. The auto body shop. The grocery store. Even among the farmers working the fields. If you went to school in Lexington during the ’60s, ’70s, ’80s, or ’90s, odds are Roher taught you math. And if you were a boy, he probably coached you, too.

I knew Ron Roher well. For 37 years, he taught math and coached at Lexington Junior High. I was one of the hundreds of boys he coached, and one of the thousands of students who sat in his classroom.

So when he retired in 2002, it felt strange that his departure was marked only by a short mention in the local paper. No ceremony. No headlines. And when he passed away in January 2021, there was only an obituary.

But maybe that wasn’t strange at all. Junior high coaches rarely get recognition. There’s no record book for the winningest junior high coach in America. No awards. No fanfare. Just seasons that begin in August and end in June.

That was Roher’s rhythm. Every August, before classes even started, he was out on the baseball field adjusting batting stances and hitting ground balls. After coaching basketball all winter, he’d finish the year with track practices in May or June, sometimes after school already had ended, preparing for the junior high boys state meet.

Ten straight months of coaching. Year after year after year.

“Lexington is certainly a different place because of Ron than it would’ve been without him,” said Dan Freed, a life-long Lexington resident who played three sports for Roher in 1978-79 and is now a longtime MLB scout with the Las Vegas Athletics.

“Let me say that differently. Lexington is a great small town because of its people. Mr. Roher was one of those people – but he also had an influence on many others. He helped shape Lexington.”

If you’re from a small town, you probably know a Ron Roher. His story is rooted in Lexington, but it echoes across the country, in places where men and women devote their lives to teaching and coaching below the high school level. Not for glory. For growth.

Their legacies aren’t written in headlines. They’re written in the lives they’ve shaped.

In all the Lance Benedicts.

Putting Lanesville on the map

Roher’s story begins in tiny Lanesville, a cluster of a couple of dozen houses tucked among the corn and bean fields of central Illinois. To find school, sports, and a sense of community, he had to travel to nearby Illiopolis – a modest town that felt like a metropolis by comparison. It was there, on the playground and gym floor, that he first dreamed of becoming the next Bob Cousy, the dazzling ball-handler of the Boston Celtics dynasty.

Roher was a talented multi-sport athlete, but by the time he graduated high school, he knew the NBA wasn’t in his future. When he arrived at Illinois State University in the fall of 1962, coaching already had captured his imagination. He admired Ray Meyer, the legendary DePaul coach, but was increasingly drawn to a rising figure at UCLA, John Wooden, who had just led the Bruins to the NCAA Final Four.

Roher didn’t just look up to Wooden; he began to emulate him. He adopted Wooden’s deliberate style, favoring calm instruction over fiery speeches. He even embraced Wooden’s famous ritual of teaching players how to properly put on their shoes and socks, a small but telling detail that spoke volumes about preparation and care.

“I remember thinking, ‘Really?’ when he did that,” said Ed Moore, who played for Roher in 1969-70, and later played AAA for the Chicago Cubs and then returned to Lexington to coach. “‘He’s showing us how to put on our socks?’

“But it set a tone. He was going to take his time and show us how to do things right.”

At ISU, Roher studied education and discovered he had a natural gift for it. As a student teacher in math, he was endlessly patient, explaining concepts again and again until they clicked. He wasn’t just teaching equations; he was building confidence, showing kids that they were capable of more than they believed.

When he graduated in 1966, nearby Lexington had an opening for a junior high math teacher and basketball coach. It was a perfect fit. He and his high school sweetheart, Mary, whom he had married in 1963, packed up their car and made the short drive to their new home.

Getting them ready for high school

Roher worked at the school year-round, teaching math during the academic year and working as a janitor and handyman in the summers, scrubbing floors and repairing classrooms.

He liked the area. The countryside was filled with farm families, and those kids brought a special kind of grittiness to their games.

The town itself reminded him of Illiopolis, with tree-lined streets, a handful of restaurants, a grocery store, post office, library, grain elevator, gas station, and, as residents liked to joke (mainly because it was true), three bars and five churches. Some families, like the Paynes, Freeds and Browns, had lived there for generations. It also had many recent move-ins, mostly folks who worked in nearby Bloomington but preferred the smaller Lexington schools.

As he started coaching – just basketball at first, before adding baseball and boys track a couple years later – he realized the assignment was quite different from what he’d imagined. There wasn’t much pressure to win. Lexington lived and died with its high school varsity teams. Cars parked in the end zone days before jam-packed home football games to claim the best seat in the house, honking after big plays. In the winter, you’d better get to the tiny gym early for a varsity basketball game, or you wouldn’t get a seat.

For the junior high teams, though, winning was secondary. The boys who reported to Roher were the town’s future, raw talent and untapped potential. They needed to be nurtured, given a solid base and taught the fundamentals, so they’d be ready for greatness when the high school coaches took over.

That philosophy intrigued Roher. Of course, he wanted to win – “Why else do they keep score?” he’d joke – but his deeper motivation was instruction. He found joy in the process — teaching key skills, building character and watching young athletes grow.

By 1970, Roher’s basketball teams had already reached the state tournament three times. That year, he coached Moore and Lexington finished fourth in the state. Moore still remembers the sting of a lucky half-court shot from the opponent that ended the third quarter of the third-place game. “We weren’t happy,” Moore said with disgust. Some competitors carry a grudge for decades.

Roher wasn’t one of them. Still, he was disappointed. He knew he’d done his job well; these kids were ready for high school. However, three trips to the state tournament had whetted his appetite.

“He wanted to win the big one, the state title,” Moore said. “It was never going to make or break him. But it was one of his goals – to hold the big trophy.”

‘Don’t tell me, show me’

At that point, the Roher family had grown. Christine was born in 1968, and three years later, her brother Scott arrived. With two small children, Ron and Mary embraced life in Lexington, drawn to the close-knit community where most high school seniors had started their educational journey together in kindergarten. They bought a house and, as with many families with sports in their DNA, mounted a basketball hoop above the garage. 

From an early age, Scott was his father’s shadow. He followed Ron to ballfields and gymnasiums, not just to watch but to learn. Roher didn’t give lectures. He gave his experiences. Scott helped line the cinder track in spring, sat on the bench with his dad in winter and measured the baseball diamond in fall, digging holes for base anchors. Amid the dirt and chalk, he absorbed lessons in responsibility, pride in a job well done and even geometry. “We measured 90 feet to first base and third base,” Scott said. “And then used a² + b² = c² to make sure we had it right.”

No job was beneath Roher. Junior high coaches rarely had help, and calling the workload “challenging” would be generous. But he embraced it all, teaching, coaching, sweeping floors after practice. He didn’t complain, and he didn’t cut corners.

Winter brought a familiar challenge — the battle for gym time. With high school teams dominating the schedule, Roher’s junior high squads often practiced before school, meaning he saw the same boys in class later in the day. It was a grind, but it taught him one of his most enduring lessons – the importance of separating athletics from academics. No matter what happened on the court, whether a player soared or stumbled, Roher left it behind when he stepped into his eighth-grade math classroom. There, they’d get the same calm, focused teacher. It was a discipline he demanded of himself, and it helped him earn his students’ trust.

Chris Hawkins, who played all three sports for Roher during the 1982–83 school year and is now a teacher and baseball coach himself, remembers that dynamic vividly. “I was a cocky kid, and I wasn’t doing well in math because I wasn’t trying hard,” he said. “He took me aside and we talked for probably half an hour. He read me the riot act. I tried to charm my way out of it, but he saw right through me.”

Roher’s message was simple and relentless: “Don’t tell me, show me.” Hawkins heard it at least twenty times during that conversation. The tough love worked. Hawkins improved in math, and he never felt that classroom frustrations spilled onto the court.

“I wouldn’t remember him as a great coach if that was the case,” Hawkins said. “And I remember him as a great coach.”

Roher earned that reputation. He attended basketball coaching clinics nearly every year, meeting legends and returning with fresh ideas. One year, he crossed paths with Bobby Knight, the acclaimed coach of the 1976 (and later 1981 and 1987) national champion Indiana Hoosiers, and didn’t hesitate to pull him aside.

“It was crazy,” said Tom Laxton, a 4th-grade teacher and 7th-grade basketball coach who was one of Roher’s closest friends. “We’re in the gym, and over in the corner, there was an 8th-grade basketball coach chewing the ear off one of the greatest college coaches in the country.

“I found out later they were deep in conversation about man-to-man defense. Ron wanted to know everything.”

Inspired, Roher committed to the defensive strategy full-time and stuck with it until the end of his career.

He very briefly tried on Knight’s fiery persona, too.

Scott remembers one postseason game when he was about 6 years old. The team was struggling, trailing at halftime. Ron had a plan — let the boys stew in the locker room, then burst in with a “Bobby Knight routine’ to jolt them awake.

“If he was mad, I was mad,” Scott said. “So, I was planning on being right there scowling, too.”

But the gym had swinging saloon-style doors. As Ron charged through them, they flung back and caught Scott squarely, sending him flying. The locker room erupted in laughter. Ron, who hardly ever lost his cool for real, dropped the angry coach act. The tension was broken, and a relaxed Lexington team returned to the court and staged a comeback win.

“He eventually learned that the best plan was to just be himself,” Scott said.

That moment stuck with Roher. He realized that authenticity, not theatrics, was his strength. His players didn’t need a show.

Roher’s 1977 squad delivered his deepest postseason run yet, advancing all the way to the state title game. There, they faced a formidable Lincoln Carroll Catholic team that was led by Dan Duff, who later played at Notre Dame.

“He was so big,” said Mick Freed, Dan’s brother and one of that team’s stars who later played in the minor leagues with the St. Louis Cardinals. “I don’t think he got any bigger after that, either. He was fully grown by eighth grade.”

Despite the challenge, Lexington battled to the end, falling by just four points. It was another near miss, but a growing sense of confidence tempered the disappointment.

“He was among the best junior high coaches in the state,” said Mick Freed.

Lexington was his home

By the early 1980s, Roher had become more than just a respected coach in central Illinois; he was one of Lexington’s most popular teachers as well.

Outside the classroom, Roher carried an intense self-competitiveness. He wasn’t trying to beat others; he was trying to beat yesterday’s version of himself.

“We’d go golfing, and he’d want to be better than he was the last time we were out,” said Laxton. “But he was never competitive with me, really. He could be hard on himself, but he was always helpful if somebody else needed it.”

That mindset carried into the classroom, where Roher was known for his patience and his willingness to help any student who asked, no matter how long it took. He often arrived early or stayed late, working one-on-one with kids who needed extra support.

Roher had a soft spot for underdogs. One day, while teaching number patterns – “1, 3, 6, 10… what comes next?” – a student who struggled in most subjects began identifying the sequence faster than anyone else. Roher lit up. He praised the boy like a star pupil and continued celebrating his success for months. It wasn’t just about math. It was about showing the class that intelligence comes in many forms, that you should never underestimate anyone. That moment became a cornerstone of Roher’s coaching philosophy.

“He coached everyone the same,” said Michael Keagle, who played for Roher in 1992 and went to state in basketball. “It was almost annoying at times. But if we had drills going on, he’d spend as much time working with the 10th-best player on the team as he would with the starters.”

Just as he did with basketball, Roher pushed himself to keep learning. In 1986, he returned to Illinois State University to take a few extra math classes, earning a certification that allowed him to get a pay raise.

He was sometimes obsessive with it. He’d take up a new subject, and for a time, he’d devote huge swarths of time and energy. He and Laxton took an adult education class in photography, and Roher threw himself into the craft with intensity, eventually building a darkroom in his basement. He often could be found around town, camera in hand, capturing squirrels in the park or snapping shots of the historic log cabin near the public pool. He had an eye for detail and a love for the town. “Lexington was his home,” said Laxton, “and he was proud of it.”

As much as anything, though, Laxton says Roher liked to laugh. If you didn’t know him well, he might seem serious. But players, students, and friends saw a different side – a dry, biting wit that could catch you off guard. After one baseball game in 1987, he was praising his lumbering catcher, Bill Brown, when he quipped: “It was a great game for Brown, who had three hits and did a great job stretching that triple into a double in the fourth inning.” It was classic Roher, funny, pointed, and delivered with a straight face.

“He was so funny,” Laxton said. “You had to be on your toes because his mind was so sharp.”

But the truth is, there wasn’t much time for Roher away from work.

His daughter Christine remembers him as a loving father, but says his coaching schedule meant he was almost always at school.

“He was coaching ten months a year,” she said. “I don’t really remember us hanging out that much or going on family vacations. You can’t do that when you’re needed by your team.”

Christine says she’s proud of how her father helped shape lives in Lexington – but sometimes wishes she had gotten to know him in that same way.

“The last time we were back in town, people came up and told me how much he had meant to them. They shared stories about things he’d said or done. How much he had mattered.

“That stuff is great. It’s important. But I was a little jealous.”

Her brother Scott saw more of their father through sports. During the 1986-87 school year, Roher had the pleasure of coaching him. It was a year Scott remembers fondly. That fall, Roher’s baseball team made a deep run, reaching the sectional final, just one win short of the state tournament.

Lexington repeated the feat the following year, losing a heartbreaker 3-2. Roher didn’t sleep well that night, replaying the game in his head, wondering if there was anything he could have done differently. The next morning, he arrived at school bleary-eyed. When the players from the team came in later that day for their eighth-grade math lesson, Roher had a simple message.

“Great season,” he said. “I’m proud of you. Get your uniforms washed and turned in by the end of the week.”

Twelve hours of brooding had been enough. He paused, then added with a familiar edge of resolve:

“Basketball practice starts Monday.”

For 37 years, a love of coaching

By the late 1980s, Roher was beginning to feel the weight of time. The long seasons, the travel, the endless practices – they were starting to take a toll. He stepped away from junior high baseball, trading the dusty diamond for the quiet greens of high school golf. It was a gentler sport, but even that couldn’t shield him from a wake-up call — a minor heart attack in 1989.

Though he delayed surgery until 1994, the experience forced Roher to reconsider the pace of his life, and the sports he could continue coaching, and he finally gave up both golf and track. However, he held on to eighth-grade basketball, where he continued to have success. In 1992, he led a team to the state tournament. He did it again in 1996.

Roher believed the 1998 team had a real shot at winning it all. As seventh graders, they’d gone undefeated until an overtime loss to Stewart-Strasburg in the state tournament. The next year, Roher brought them back. And waiting in the semifinals? The rematch with Stewart-Strasburg.

“That game was on our minds all year,” said Chris Coffey, a standout on that team who went on to play four years of varsity basketball and is now a high school coach himself.

Lexington got its revenge, 52–50. The championship game didn’t go their way. Hanna City Logan – a powerhouse led by a pair of tall, identical twins – beat Lexington by nine. Another second-place finish. But this one felt different. This one almost felt like a win.

“Yeah, Roher was disappointed,” said Dan Freed, who coached the seventh-grade team that winter and assisted with the eighth graders.

“But that team was so talented and so coachable, he said it might’ve been the most fun he’d ever had coaching.”

So when Roher announced his retirement from basketball just weeks later, it caught people off guard.

“I think he wanted to go out on a high note,” Dan Freed said.

And he did.

Roher left behind a coaching legacy that’s hard to match. He led eight basketball teams to the state tournament, finishing second twice. He was named the Illinois Coaches Association Coach of the Year in both 1977 and 1998. He sent dozens of athletes to the boys state track meet.

“If he’d had that kind of record as a high school coach, he’d be considered a legend,” Coffey said.

In baseball, five of Roher’s former junior high players went on to play in the minor leagues. Many others played in college. A good number became coaches themselves.

In 2021, Roher was honored with The Lexington Education Advancement Foundation’s Patriot Award, which recognizes individuals who have contributed to the excellence of the school district over the years.

It was an incredible honor, given that he had never coached a single high school game.

‘Better people because you were our coach’

Ten years ago, I was invited back to Lexington for the 25th reunion of the 1990 varsity baseball team – the high school’s only state championship squad. That group included the same players who had made back-to-back sectional title-game runs with Roher in junior high.

Billy DuBois organized the event. Scott couldn’t make it, but Roher was there, wearing his signature cowboy boots and proudly reminding anyone who’d listen that he was the first to tell Coach Ed Moore this group had the potential to be special.

The room buzzed with laughter and old stories. The smell of barbecue mixed with the sound of ’80s rock, and every so often someone would slip next door to Kemp’s Upper Tap to grab a few beers. Jon Kemp was waiting.

Coach Moore spoke, as did a few of the team’s stars. I was asked to say a few words, and I did – proudly declaring that in 1990 I was “the best damned bullpen catcher in the state of Illinois.” It was a joke, of course. But it was also true.

Someone shared a story about how Ron and Mary Roher had grabbed our dirty uniforms between games at state and rushed off to a local laundromat to get them washed. We looked fresh every time we took the field that weekend in Springfield.

It was a great event, and near the end, I found myself standing with my friend Lance Benedict – the same player Roher had helped with tough love all those years ago.

Our old junior high coach walked over.

As he always did, Roher told us how proud he was of us and of that team. He mentioned again how he’d been the first person to predict greatness for his son’s senior season team. He was so pleased that he’d had a part in it.

Then he paused and shook his head slightly.

“You were state champions,” he said. “That was the one thing I never accomplished.”

Lance didn’t hesitate.

“That doesn’t matter,” he said. “I probably wouldn’t be where I am without you. Probably none of us would.

“We’re better people because you were our coach.”

Roher left that night with a smile on his face.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow is expected to start on Thanksgiving against the Ravens.
  • Burrow has missed the last nine games due to a turf toe injury.
  • The Bengals are 3-8 and will be without receiver Tee Higgins and defensive end Trey Hendrickson.

Cincinnati Bengals head coach Zac Taylor told reporters Nov. 24 that he expects quarterback Joe Burrow to start during the team’s Thanksgiving Day contest against the Baltimore Ravens (8:20 p.m. ET, NBC/Peacock).

Burrow’s return would end a nine-game absence caused by a Grade 3 turf toe injury suffered in the Bengals’ second game of the season. Since then, they have turned to Jake Browning (four games) at the quarterback spot and traded for Joe Flacco (five games).

The estimated timeline from Burrow’s surgery to returning to game action was three months, which pointed to a return sometime in mid-December.

After a 2-0 start, the Bengals are 3-8 and tied for the second-worst point-differential in the league (minus-112).

The Bengals will be without one of Burrow’s top targets in receiver Tee Higgins, while the Cincinnati defense will be minus its best defensive player, Trey Hendrickson.

Baltimore has won five straight to surge to the top of the AFC North, a race for which the Bengals trail by three games with six to play.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • Florida State’s football program has struggled since filing a lawsuit against the ACC two years ago.
  • The university announced it will retain coach Mike Norvell, partly due to the high cost of a buyout.

Just when you think you don’t believe in karma, along comes Florida State.

The Seminoles filed a scathing lawsuit against the ACC two years ago as they sought to nullify the financial penalty they had agreed to in a grant of rights deal, if only they could lure another conference to accept them.

The maneuvering reeked of FSU thinking it’s better than the ACC.

“This is all about having the option to go somewhere,” Florida State board of trustees chair Peter Collins told USA TODAY Sports in 2023.

The only place FSU went was down in the ACC standings.

Since filing the lawsuit, the Seminoles are 7-17.

In Florida State’s latest loss, the NC State punter recovered a FSU fumble back at the original line of scrimmage, after his punt caromed off a Seminoles player’s noggin. Re-read that sentence, watch the highlight of the truly bizarre Florida State gaffe, and tell me you don’t believe in karma.

Two days after that loss, Florida State announced it’s retaining sunken coach Mike Norvell — not because it believes in the momentum he’s building, but because Norvell and his staff would be expensive to fire.

The playoff committee cruelly rejected an undefeated Seminoles team in 2023 in favor of Alabama, the SEC’s one-loss champions. True, FSU was down to its third-string quarterback, because of injuries, but it had earned a playoff spot through its performance.

I said that then, and I’ll say it now: That was an unjust fate.

But, these past two seasons? Those are just desserts.

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s senior national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The campaign firm that helped Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani spread his message in New York City is now turning its focus to vulnerable Republicans across the country.

Among other races, the firm has set its sights on defeating two vulnerable House Republicans in Pennsylvania: Reps. Rob Bresnahan and Ryan Mackenzie.

Fight Agency — a six-man crew with experience in over 300 winning elections — focuses on many of the issues Mamdani made a fixture of his campaign, like affordability and housing.

‘If you’re doing everything right but finding it harder and harder to get by, you’re not alone. We know a simple truth about American life: the economy is not delivering enough for enough people. If the next forty years are like the last forty years, the American middle class will disappear,’ the firm states on its website.

The balance of power in the House of Representatives is in a precarious position ahead of the 2026 midterms. With Republicans holding just a three-seat majority, even one or two key losses for Republicans could cut the legs out from under the GOP’s control over the chamber. Pennsylvania — home to both Bresnahan and Mackenzie — also makes up a key battleground state with several competitive districts. According to the Cook Political Report, the state has five competitive Republican-held districts all projected to be a five-point contest or less.

In that struggle, the Fight Agency’s leaders have come to the support of Paige Cognetti, a former mayor of Scranton, Pa., who is running to unseat Bresnahan. Bresnahan, a freshman lawmaker, won election to Congress in 2024 by just 1.6 percentage points.

‘We can stand tall against a Washington that takes advantage of working people and makes it work for us,’ Cognetti said in her launch video.

Rebecca Katz, the Fight Agency’s strategist for the election of Sen. Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., reposted Cognetti’s campaign ad in a post to X.

‘If you can, pls chip in a few bucks and let’s get someone who cares about people in Congress,’ Rebecca Katz wrote. 

Cognetti, the former mayor, has also highlighted the firm’s other work, saying she was ‘proud to know these folks’ in a repost showcasing the agency’s past campaigns.

Like in Cognetti’s campaign, the Fight Agency team is also supporting Bob Brooks and his race against Republican incumbent Ryan Mackenzie in Pennsylvania. Mackenzie won election by a single percentage point in the last cycle.

‘The biggest problem we face is a Washington that burns working people,’ Brooks said in his campaign launch video. ‘I’m running for Congress in one of the closest districts to take on the billionaires and big corporations holding us back.’ 

Morris Katz, the firm’s lead on the Mamdani campaign, reposted Cognetti’s launch video alongside Fight Agency’s main account. Brooks has returned the favor, reposting Fight Agency’s productions in a Maine Senate race. 

With Mamdani, the firm helped produce lighthearted content with a brighter, more comedic edge. In one video, the firm mimicked the style of ‘The Bachelor,’ the TV romance show known for its match-making drama.

‘New York, will you accept this rose?’ Mamdani asked in the video.

In the past, the firm has supported Democrat candidates away from the mainstream of the party, gravitating towards either more progressive candidates or candidates with an unconventional streak.

Besides Mamdani, some of Fight Agency’s previous partners include Sen. Bernie Sanders,’ I-Vt., bid for president and Sen. John Fetterman’s 2021 campaign. 

Today, some of their more high-profile current candidates include Maine Democratic Senate candidate Graham Platner and Nebraska Senate hopeful Dan Osborn, both featured prominently on the firm’s website.

Fight Agency did not respond to a request for comment.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The Club for Growth says it has President Donald Trump’s back as the president pushes Republican-controlled states to redraw congressional maps in order to create more right-leaning districts to help defend the GOP’s fragile House majority in next year’s midterm elections.

‘We’re all in on helping Republicans do redistricting,’ David McIntosh, longtime president of the deep-pocketed and influential conservative group, said in an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital.

McIntosh highlighted that the Club for Growth’s seven-figure efforts ‘give Republicans a better shot at winning those extra districts.’

The push by the Club is the latest example of its strong support for the president and his policies, just two years after the group worked to prevent Trump from winning the 2024 Republican presidential nomination amid a bitter feud.

Trump and his political team are aiming to pad the GOP’s razor-thin House majority to keep control of the chamber in next year’s midterms, when the party in power traditionally faces political headwinds and loses seats.

Trump is trying to prevent what happened during his first term in the White House when Democrats reclaimed the House majority in the 2018 midterm elections.

Texas was the first Republican-controlled state to pass rare but not-unheard-of mid-decade congressional redistricting, although a ruling by two federal judges threatens to overturn the redrawn map. Missouri, North Carolina and Ohio have also drawn new maps as part of the president’s push.

Indiana, where McIntosh served three terms as a congressman 25 years ago, is the latest battlefield in the high-stakes redistricting showdown pitting Trump and Republicans versus Democrats to shape the 2026 midterm landscape in the fight for the House majority.

‘Democrats for years have gerrymandered and Republicans have not, and now it’s time so we can have Republicans in Congress for states like my home state of Indiana, step up to the plate, draw the district, so Republicans can be represented,’ McIntosh argued.

Trump has threatened to back primary challenges against Republican state lawmakers in Indiana who are reluctant to pass redistricting.

‘I was delighted to see President Trump calling them to do it. And you know, he said, we’re going to start endorsing against you if you don’t do what’s right for the Republican Party and for the nation. Club for Growth will be there to back up his endorsements,’ McIntosh said.

And the Club’s political arm, the Club for Growth Action super PAC, which is one of the biggest spenders in Republican primary showdowns thanks to the support of top-dollar conservative donors, is running ads to support the president’s push in right-leaning states across the country.

‘We’re way over seven figures when you put together all the different states. And what we’re doing is running ads. We have a new ad today that talks about the need for redistricting,’ McIntosh revealed. ‘We have a program that brings constituent calls into the Senate members, and so they get to hear directly from their voters that they want them to do this.’

It’s not just redistricting.

The Club is spending seven figures in next week’s hotly contested special election for a Republican-controlled vacant House seat in a solidly red congressional district in Tennessee.

‘Matt Epps is going to win,’ McIntosh said as he pointed to the Trump-endorsed GOP nominee in the race to succeed former Republican Rep. Mark Green, who resigned from office in June to take a private sector job.

‘It’s going to be a hard race. They all are, but he’s going to win that race because he’s more in line with Tennessee,’ McIntosh said of Van Epps. ‘I’m confident of him, and we’re going to help him do it.’

And looking ahead to next year’s midterms, McIntosh shared that the Club has ‘already started raising a $40 million fund to keep the House majority, and we’re about 25 million into it.’

‘I’m going to keep going, and then we’ll deploy that to make sure Republicans can keep the majority,’ he emphasized.

Club for Growth says it will spend big bucks to help Republicans keep control of the House next year.

And as they’ve done in the past, the Club, which pushes a fiscally conservative agenda, including a focus on tax cuts and other economic issues, will once again play an influential role in GOP primaries.

‘We’re interviewing a lot of candidates now. We’re going to look for the strongest conservative candidate, somebody who wants to continue the economic progress, less regulation, lower taxes, balance the budget, the things that will make America great,’ McIntosh said. ‘And then when we endorse them, we’ll come in with our funding to pay for ads. We’ll recruit and help them raise money. It’s important we get the right Republicans in these primaries, and there are a lot of open seats.’

Democrats are energized coming out of their party’s sweeping victories earlier this month in the 2026 elections.

‘Democrats have racked up wins this year by running on affordability and lowering costs, and headed into 2026 our momentum continues to build,’ CJ Warnke, communications director for the Democrat-aligned House Majority PAC told Fox News Digital.

Warnke predicted, ‘As Trump’s poll numbers on the economy continue to plummet and voters see him prioritizing the elite over lowering prices, his broken promises will sink House Republicans. No Republican-held seat is safe, and HMP will do whatever it takes to win the House in 2026.’

McIntosh sees the 2025 elections as ‘a warning sign, a wake-up call for two things.’

‘One, we got to get our voters out, and that’s the job of the party and Club for Growth and groups like us,’ McIntosh noted.

But he added that ‘the party has to explain how our agenda makes life more affordable, how we can lower your insurance costs by forcing the insurance industry to tell you how much they’re charging. We can lower housing by getting rid of all sorts of regulation.’

McIntosh and the Club have had an up-and-down relationship with the president. They opposed Trump as he ran for the White House in 2016 before embracing him as an ally. In the 2022 cycle, Trump and the Club teamed up in some high-profile GOP primaries but clashed over combustible Senate nomination battles in Alabama, Ohio and Pennsylvania.

The Club was on the outs with Trump as the 2024 Republican presidential nomination race got underway. Trump repeatedly criticized McIntosh and the Club, referring to them as ‘The Club for NO Growth,’ and claimed they were ‘an assemblage of political misfits, globalists, and losers.’

However, Trump and McIntosh made peace in early 2024, with Trump saying as he was wrapping up the GOP presidential nomination, that they were ‘back in love’ after the protracted falling out.

Asked about the Club’s relationship with Trump, McIntosh said, ‘We’re right there with the President, especially in these races … Club for Growth is very aligned with President Trump, and we’re especially in these contested races, we’re going to help him win.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

A federal judge threw out the indictments against James Comey and Letitia James on Monday, finding they were illegitimate because they were brought by an unqualified U.S. attorney.

Judge Cameron Currie dismissed the false statements charges against Comey and bank fraud charges against James without prejudice, meaning the charges could be brought again.

‘I conclude that the Attorney General’s attempt to install Ms. Halligan as Interim U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia was invalid and that Ms. Halligan has been unlawfully serving in that role since September 22, 2025,’ Currie wrote.

The Department of Justice could appeal the decision or attempt to bring the charges under a different U.S. attorney. Fox News Digital has reached out to the DOJ for comment.

The move to scrap two of the highest-profile criminal cases the DOJ has leveled against President Donald Trump’s political foes comes after the judge voiced skepticism at a recent hearing in Virginia about Lindsey Halligan’s ability to bring the charges as interim U.S. attorney.

Currie, a Clinton appointee based in South Carolina, was brought in from out of state to preside over proceedings about the question of Halligan’s authority because it presented a conflict for the Virginia judges. Comey’s and James’ challenges to Halligan’s appointment were consolidated because of their similarity.

Halligan acted alone in presenting charges to a grand jury days after Trump ousted the prior interim U.S. attorney, Erik Siebert, and replaced him with Halligan. At the same time, Trump urged Attorney General Pam Bondi in a social media post to act quickly to indict Comey, a call that came as the statutes of limitations in his case was about to lapse. Halligan, who had no prior prosecutorial experience when she took over one of the most high-profile federal court districts in the country, was the lone lawyer to present the cases to the grand jury and sign the indictments. No prosecutors from Virginia joined in on the case.

The DOJ has since put its full backing behind Halligan. Bondi attempted to ratify and then re-ratify the indictments after the fact, a move Currie suggested would not have been necessary if Halligan were a valid appointee.

DOJ attorney Henry Whitaker had argued during the hearing that the motions to dismiss Comey’s and James’ cases involved ‘at best a paperwork error.’

James’ attorney Abbe Lowell said Halligan was a ‘private person’ when she entered the grand jury rooms and completely unauthorized to be in them. Currie agreed, saying in her decision that retroactively validating Halligan and her actions would be unheard of.

‘The implications of a contrary conclusion are extraordinary,’ Currie wrote. ‘It would mean the Government could send any private citizen off the street — attorney or not — into the grand jury room to secure an indictment so long as the Attorney General gives her approval after the fact. That cannot be the law.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Gotham FC celebrated its second NWSL title in three years with a parade and ceremony in New York City on Monday, Nov. 24.

‘The Bats have brought the championship to New York City once again,’ said New York City mayor Eric Adams, who presented the team with keys to the city. ‘[This team] has shown time and time again that you never can be counted out. You have the New York City grit, resiliency and determination.’

Adams repeated Gotham forward Jaedyn Shaw’s declaration after the No. 8-seed Gotham FC upset No. 1 Kansas City Current in the quarterfinals. ‘Underdogs my ass,’ he said. 

Midfielder Rose Lavelle scored in the 80th minute to beat the Washington Spirit, 1-0, Saturday, Nov. 22, in front of a sellout crowd of 18,000 at PayPal Park in San Jose, California. Lavelle’s score was the latest opening goal in league championship history.

The Bats beat Kansas City in the quarterfinals, No. 4 Orlando, the defending camp, in the semifinals and No. 2 Washington in the championship.

The parade started at Barclay Street in Lower Manhattan and headed up Broadway to Chambers Street. The key to the city ceremony was held outside City Hall. 

Gotham FC represents New York and New Jersey, playing at Sports Illustrated Stadium in Harrison, New Jersey.

‘We wanted to build something special, we knew we had a group of fantastic players,’ Gotham FC coach Juan Carlos Amorós said. ‘These players have not only done it for themselves, but gone above and beyond for the person next to them.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • The Eagles’ offense once again went into turtle mode, costing the team greatly in a 24-21 loss to the Cowboys.
  • The Chiefs finally broke through with a late win in a close contest, while the Colts wilted down the stretch.
  • J.J. McCarthy continues to raise questions about his viability for the Vikings in 2026.

Week 12 in the NFL was no mere appetizer to the forthcoming Thanksgiving slate.

Yes, the holiday schedule sure looks tantalizing, with the league trotting out a troika of highly consequential matchups. But a Sunday setup that initially looked light on thrills ended up holding its own when it came to producing entertainment, with three games going to overtime after double-digit comebacks. And with two-thirds of the regular season now wrapped up, it’s hard to shake the emerging pecking order in certain parts of the playoff picture, even though nothing has been settled on that front.

Here are the biggest winners and losers from NFL Week 12:

NFL Week 12 winners

Jahmyr Gibbs

Sunday looked like it could be calamitous for the Detroit Lions, who found themselves in a 10-point fourth-quarter hole at home against the shorthanded New York Giants. Gibbs, however, prevented a full-blown meltdown. The running back ripped off a 49-yard touchdown run midway through the fourth to cut the deficit, and his 69-yard scoring sprint in overtime provided the ultimate edge in a 34-27 win. He finished the day with a career-high 264 yards from scrimmage and three touchdowns on 26 total touches. Gibbs also reaffirmed his status as the league’s premier breakaway threat, as he now owns three of the four fastest speeds by a ball carrier this season, according to Next Gen Stats.

The Jameis Winston experience

Yes, the 11-year veteran didn’t end up pulling off the upset and eating a Detroit-style W. That’s about the only missing element of his outing, though. Winston was the perfect triggerman for interim Giants coach Mike Kafka’s go-for-broke approach. The heightened entertainment value was evident from the opening drive, when Winston chucked a 39-yard touchdown to Wan’Dale Robinson on a trick play. But the peak would come in the second half, when the quarterback hauled in a pass from Gunner Olszewski and then spun out of Lions linebacker Derrick Barnes’ grasp before reaching the end zone. He ended up with a classic Winston line: 18-of-36 for 366 passing yards, two touchdowns and one interception. But for a moment, he made a lot of people care about a Giants team that was without Jaxson Dart. No easy feat.

Kansas City Chiefs’ playoff outlook

Regressions to the mean typically are supposed to result in the affected party landing somewhere close to, well … the mean. Instead, the Chiefs have swung from one polarity to the other on one-score games, going from 12-0 last year to 0-5 prior to Sunday. The result was a 5-5 mark that didn’t fully capture the capabilities of this year’s team. In what could be an inflection point for Kansas City’s season, the team finally rediscovered the late-game edge that had eluded it so far in 2025, squeezing out a 23-20 overtime win against the Indianapolis Colts. Between Patrick Mahomes leading a methodical march in crunch time and the defense ramping up the pressure late, the Chiefs at least somewhat resembled previous championship-caliber editions and how they were able to close out contests. If the Chiefs can handle a critical three-week stretch that brings tilts with the Cowboys, Texans and Chargers, they could find themselves in prime position for another postseason run – even if it’s as a wild-card entrant.

Chicago Bears’ resilience

Caleb Williams had more than a few misfires, prompting the Chicago Bears quarterback to label his day as ‘frustrating.’ And the Pittsburgh Steelers took advantage of an already shorthanded defense that had its entire starting linebacker group nuked by injuries, piling up 186 rushing yards. But maybe this was yet another distinction between the previous iterations of the Bears, who might have let this game slip through their fingers, and this year’s crew, who prevailed 31-28 to run their record to 8-3. Chicago’s formula doesn’t exactly feel foolproof, as it typically entails relying on takeaways – two more coming against Pittsburgh – to cover for several defensive shortcomings. But fans should be encouraged that this young group is finding ways to persevere even when things aren’t fully clicking.

Jaxon Smith-Njigba

It stood to reason that a one-win team that fired its coach more than a month ago wouldn’t offer up much resistance to the NFL’s leading receiver. But Smith-Njigba was totally unsolvable to the Tennessee Titans’ secondary, posting eight catches for 167 yards and two touchdowns in the Seattle Seahawks’ 30-24 win. With that line, he broke the Seahawks’ single-season franchise record for receiving yards at 1,313 … through just 11 games. A 2,000-yard campaign – which would break Calvin Johnson’s all-time mark of 1,964 – is within reach, especially given that Seattle could need every bit of Smith-Njigba’s contributions for a playoff push that could last all the way through its Week 18 finale against the San Francisco 49ers.

Marcus Jones

In late October, Jones inked a three-year, $36 million extension with the New England Patriots. Three weeks later, it was the slot cornerback who was providing the major payout. In the second quarter against the Cincinnati Bengals, Jones jumped a late Joe Flacco throw to the flat for an easy pick-six that put the Patriots ahead after a slow start. A third-round pick in 2022 and holdover from the Bill Belichick era, Jones has long demonstrated a rare playmaking streak, primarily as a returner. But he’s also been a major asset to Mike Vrabel as a slot corner, where he’s seen even more action this season.

Emanuel Wilson

Matt LaFleur really, really wants the run game to power the Green Bay Packers offense. That commitment has been apparent all season, but it was fully on display Sunday, when the coach turned to Wilson to shoulder the load with starter Josh Jacobs sidelined by a knee injury. In his first start, Wilson ran for 107 yards and two touchdowns on 28 carries in a 23-6 win over the Minnesota Vikings. Used mostly as a battering ram between the tackles, the third-year back helped LaFleur and Green Bay play keep-away with a 37:15 time of possession. But while there might not have been many highlight-reel runs, he’s still the first Packers player to rush for 100 yards since Week 12 of last year.

Shedeur Sanders

Let’s keep everything in perspective when it comes to Sanders, a player who provokes hyperbole across the sports media spectrum. Of course, part of that process necessitates allotting credit where it’s due, and the rookie quarterback added substance to spectacle in leading the Cleveland Browns to a 24-10 win over the Las Vegas Raiders. Sanders handled a streamlined game plan and largely avoided mistakes, particularly the sacks he was so prone to in college. It was hardly electrifying, but that was a meaningful shift for a Browns offense that couldn’t even handle the basics at times with fellow rookie Dillon Gabriel at the helm. Is that enough to keep the job even if Gabriel can return from a concussion next week? At least Sanders turned that into a conversation.

NFL Week 12 losers

Philadelphia Eagles’ conservative offense

A 21-0 lead after Philadelphia’s first three possessions seemed like it would put the defending champions on track for another rivalry rout against the Dallas Cowboys. Then, everything came undone for the Eagles in an eventual 24-21 loss. The offense abandoned the aggressive approach that helped the unit build the advantage in the first place, instead opting to recede into its shell yet again. That style can pay off with the right support, but this year’s group simply doesn’t have the same level of assurances in place that its predecessor did. For one, the offensive line and run game haven’t rediscovered the dominant form that allowed Philadelphia to set the tone regardless of its risk aversion. That trend continued against the Cowboys, with the Eagles averaging just 3.5 yards per carry and Saquon Barkley being held to a season-low 22 yards. But operating in that mode also necessitates a level of composure that Philadelphia fell well short of with its 14 penalties and two costly fourth-quarter fumbles, among other miscues. The defense has to be in absolutely elite form to overcome those factors, and the task was too tall for the Eagles this week. It’s high time to recognize this as more than a point of locker room intrigue, as a repeat run will be almost impossible if Nick Sirianni and offensive coordinator Kevin Patullo continue to keep this ceiling in place.

Shane Steichen

The Colts’ rise to the forefront of the AFC playoff race has been met with some degree of skepticism, with many questioning whether the league’s offensive standard-bearer had staying power. In easily its greatest test to date, Indianapolis failed to rise to the occasion and affirm its contender credentials. That falls largely on Steichen, the head coach and play-caller who repeatedly acknowledged ‘I have to be better’ after his team went three-and-out four times in the fourth quarter and overtime. In the first three of those series, NFL leading rusher Jonathan Taylor logged just one carry. Perhaps it’s understandable that Steichen would have been reticent to run the ball carrier into yet another loaded box given that Taylor was hit behind the line of scrimmage on a season-high 62.5% of his runs, according to Next Gen Stats. But going the pass-happy route when Daniel Jones was shaky at best left far too much up to a defense that did more than its part, with Kansas City able to wear down the unit with a stunning 91 plays. Finding a way forward in these scenarios could determine whether Indianapolis is an actual threat in the postseason or merely a nice regular-season story, as opponents are sure to try to replicate Steve Spagnuolo’s game plan.

Las Vegas Raiders’ new regime

Is it time to start unwinding this group after just 11 games? It’s at least clear that the status quo can’t hold, with offensive coordinator Chip Kelly fired Sunday in the aftermath of an embarrassing bottoming out against the Browns. Kelly long seemed like a strange fit for the direction of this organization, with his deployment of Ashton Jeanty only heightening concerns. But what play-caller can pull this attack as currently constructed out of the darkness? Maybe another offseason overhaul will actually prove fruitful this time, particularly if help can be found for the overmatched offensive line or underdeveloped receiving corps. But there’s a fundamental misalignment between 74-year-old Pete Carroll and a franchise in need of a multi-year runway, so maybe another full teardown is in store.

J.J. McCarthy

Both McCarthy and coach Kevin O’Connell last week tried to turn down the volume on the rising discontent surrounding the Vikings quarterback’s trajectory, with O’Connell saying he was eager ‘to start seeing the concrete kind of dry a little bit on the work that’s put in.’ On Sunday, however, the Packers wrote their names in the wet cement. McCarthy once again wasn’t nearly quick or decisive enough, taking five sacks and throwing two interceptions while throwing for just 87 yards. It was probably too much to expect a young quarterback to have answers for Micah Parsons (two sacks) and a defense that generated pressure McCarthy on 12 of his 26 dropbacks. But even with just six starts in his career, it’s getting difficult to see the upside in continuing on with him. At 4-7, the Vikings need to keep collecting data on McCarthy, which means giving him more reps even as the outlook worsens. But the 2026 quarterback plan for Minnesota seems like it needs to at least include an insurance option at the very least.

Drake Maye

The Patriots’ second-year quarterback was probably facing an uphill battle to push to the front of the MVP conversation. But his odds for the award took a hit Sunday, as did New England’s offensive outlook for the rest of the season. Both left guard Jared Wilson and left tackle Will Campbell left the game with injuries and did not return, leaving a degree of uncertainty for a front that’s enjoyed an enviable level of consistency. But the offense’s woes extended well beyond personnel losses. Maye threw a pick-six to Geno Stone and otherwise had an uncharacteristically off-kilter outing, with his passer rating (87.1) his lowest since the rain-drenched season opener. The Patriots, who were the only team besides the Browns not to post at least 27 points against the Bengals so far this season, also came up empty after snapping the ball from Cincinnati’s 1-yard line on seven consecutive plays. Maye has shown enough to mark this as an aberration that shouldn’t overshadow an otherwise remarkably successful season – including the league’s best record at 10-2 and a nine-game win streak – but the problems could compound if they go unaddressed.

Baltimore Ravens offense

In a vacuum, a five-game win streak and return to the top of the AFC North standings – where they’re now tied with the Steelers at 6-5 – should be cause for celebration in Charm City. But several members of the Ravens’ offense were far from content after the Ravens’ 23-10 win over the New York Jets, each saying improvement was needed. One year after performing at a level that nearly earned him his third NFL MVP award, Lamar Jackson looks out of sorts, passing for just 153 yards on Sunday. Whether when taking off or merely avoiding the rush, Jackson’s running ability appears to have taken a significant hit, which has been particularly problematic when combined with the offensive line’s protection lapses. And while Derrick Henry scored two touchdowns against New York, the run game hasn’t provided a sufficient spark to make up for the inertia. Crunch time is here for the Ravens with two meetings against the Bengals sandwiching a home showdown with the Steelers, so Baltimore can’t afford to take long to sort out these issues.

Amon-Ra St. Brown

After catching just two of 12 targets in the Lions’ offensive face plant last week against the Eagles, St. Brown said he wasn’t concerned about the uncharacteristic drops that were starting to pile up. “I’ve caught so many balls in my life that the next one comes, I’m going to catch it, and I’m going to catch a lot more than I don’t,’ he told reporters last week. The problem persisted this week, however, as St. Brown had two more costly whiffs, including one that led to a Jevon Holland interception. It’s hardly panic time for the two-time All-Pro, but Detroit’s offense doesn’t have the same margin for error as it did in previous years.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY